Daily British Whig (1850), 21 Apr 1906, p. 15

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rrel. which your hold en flour you entire wheat 10icest grain, iethods, for our-making. pe of light, hold Flour er flour. It Xtra amount r family and say " Royal Limited es, of excellent er car tell you : Ne. in Taste. E S ise." Line Wall istic in wall RED best Store- ared to take ve at $1.00 e Range st: Baking Stove ROS Phone 35. ICIHCIASICIKADIGR OR A # NCE ant a Home ance, have = h L RESTA ler, ™E 3" RSUkaNCE ck Street. SALE Store doing a large smart village, in ict, For particulars J. * LOCKHART, Agent, 159 Welling- iton. III H+ WAAR EH ERA EEF REE +» ediate Delivery OUR PRICES 1 Co. Phone Main 1729, Tea Flavor and Strength HE greater body and richness of Indian tea goe st rich ---- of Ceylon tea. when combined with the delicately flavored but thinner tea of Ceylon, produces that "rich fruity flav sor "of Red Rose Tea--a tea that is strong and ge s further--requires less to make a cup of equal strength than any brand of Ceylon tea alone. § Red Rose, lea combines the strength and ss of Indian tea and the delicacy and fragrance Rose Tea is good Tea T. H. Estabrooks St. John, N.B., Toronto, Winniges | L hereby ¢ have analy: ord Wir ne ay the Pr } act as on ex Provineict a VINCIAL GOVERNMENT ANALYST. ed Wilson's Iwalids® Poy oontains thie best of Natural Ginchon t Bark as its chief Jrincipics ar er proportion to fize rand a most agrecable tonic and fortifier. AE ltr 2X THE PRO- er rtify that 1 t and find it wd Extract of These active e blended mn cellent appe- cernment Analyst. Dollar Package FR EE Man Medicine Free 22 can h Bow ob! of Man Ne Mi Medicine dona 4 7olu To ect ¥ ID BOOK (thin Say lary ve wn rin, KE TTAMBIRD $ iS that ¥ 5u are not send- tiin a Jago dollar size free kness. \0S you once more.the gusto. the pulse and throb of weakness, rain fag, gidney trouble and at home by Man Medi- lar pacl:age will be de- wrapper, sealed, with The full size doi- 'ments of any kind, no bipers tosign. It is free. Il do what you real man, mho-like, oss win brirg it: all you and got fg, Ve send it free of ho man sex Inter. ck D13g.. Detrodt, Mich. ee Ll | HONEY AT" HONE a Fes Fach ahia than chickens. Al indoors "miko BREAD 10 CENTS, Hy NS." showing how to staid of colu, Address EED, 3 st, Loses, Ou " CLEVELAND IMPROVED What the Business Men of That Big City Did. The Chamber of Commerce, Cleve- land, is the pioneer among boards of trade in deanng not only with trade business and hnancial matters, but ex- tending its work and influence to every plan ot life of a /great city. It socks not only to be alive to the present needs ot the city, but, endéavors to ex- tend its outlook into the future and provide against = contingencics in years {0 come. Most conspicuous of the movements pertaining to civic improvement, in which this chamber has bécn engaged, is that of the magnificent grouping of the public and semi-public buildings, about a central] mall, extending from the lake to the public square. form- ing a stately gateway to the city. The Jrne dew, plan involved the expenditure of more than thirteen million dollars, a part | of which' sum will be returnable to the | city by the sale under restrictions concerning its use of land which it wilt | have acquired. The sentiment of this chamber has bean to advocate all seagonable plans | for: the improvement and extension of | its parks system. Its influfhee was of- ten exerted in aid of the park com- mission under whose management the great development of Cleveland's park system was made, It has a committee } . greater benefit not only to the present on sanitation, which ~ improved the sanitary condition of the schools, had the streets cleaned properly, published i health code, had the health of all school children inspected by efty phy- sicians. Its industrial committee has endeavored to secure fair conditions | for all employees; believing that good | wages, seasonable homes, and comfor- | table and sanitary surroundings "el basic principles in 'work, and that the highest efficiency of a business can only be reached by bringing about tne highest efficiency of "its various ele" ments. The prevalence of these ideas is shown by the fact that every new fac- | tory has made welfare provisions for | its employees. These are only a few of the activi- | tics of this up-to-date chamber of com- | merce, but it is noteworthy that in | their report the parks and group plan | of public buildings receive first place. The great centres of commerce and manufacture, have learned that next to thé public schools there is no dis position of public pride that is of | but to future generations, than the stablishment of parks. A New Idea In Separate Jacket. Visions of the shoulder cape, of long ago are recalled by this newest model for the separate silk jacket. Th length is that of the shoulder cape, and the neck is high and finished with the same style turnover collar. The fronts are laid in deep pleats, four in number, giving a broad shoulder line, the hack built in thy same manner and' the very full circular. sleeve -is set in the armhole under the fourth pleat, which cimeedls. the joining at this pint, the slave' falling in such soft folds that it is scarcely possible to believe, ~ without cle examination, that the little garment is not all in one piece. White broadcloth makes the collar and the simulaged vest, these outlined with a fancy open-work silk braid. Compare The Relief. 7 Ii you have been accustomed to use ing ordinapy liniments, try Smith's White Linifaont the next time and see how much quicker it relieves end cures, It belongs in a class by itself, and vet costs less than the common kinds. Cures rheumatism, neuralgia, and all external injuries, Large bot- tles 25¢ at Wade's, Money heck if not satisfactory, , a He who is away from home most of i fruits would rende { came the ceremony of the time dodges a Jot of domestic trouble, BLOOD ACCUSATION. AGAINST JEWS SINCE THE TWELFTH CENTURY. : How a Hebrew Writer Regards It . --Superstitious Notion That Jews Required Blood of Christian Child for Passover. ews. The advent bf Passover reminds us of the grim counncetion which history has established between the celebra- tion of what is otherwise one ot our brightest and happiest festivals, and the déabolical chavge of ritual murder which enemies of the Jewrn people have preferred against them ever since the twelfth century. kaster ! 'tne Blood Accusation ! 'the two things in- variably suggest one another by the sheer toree of association of ideas. 't he affair of St. Simon of 'lrent, in the Middle Ages, 'the Aléxandria, the 1is- za-tslar, the Corfu, the Xanten, the Yolna, and the Konitz cases, in mod- ern times, have all had their otigin in the superstitious notion that Jews require the blood of 5 Ch for the manufacture of Pas and of Passover wine. Ihe case of Simon of Trent, in 1475, is particularly instructive, inas- much 'as the. Feast' of Passover that year began on Wednesday evening, March 22nd, but the boy did not dis- appear until "Thursday, and he is said to have been murdered on Friday. Al though it was thus impossible that the boy's blood, coyla have been re quired for the rights of that particul ar Passover, the accusers of the Jews were not at a loss to frame an in dictment. The year 1475 was celebrat ed by the Catholic church as a jubilee year; so it was assumed -that the Jews alsp colebrated it as 4 jubilee, and on this particular occasion they required "fresh Christian blood." But when the people are sunk in ig- norance and given over to supersti- tion, no helief is too imeredible for them to harbor, whether they live .in medigeval or . modern times. Credo quia absurdumy, est is the principle up on which they think. It must Le so, or at least consideration would suffice to convince those among whom tales of Jewish child murder at Fastertide ciceulate of their monstrous false- hood. As regards the general charge of ritnal murder, it is entirely de molished by two simple facts: (1) That the Decalogue denounces murder as {erime, and (2) that Jews are forbid. den to eat blood. © But when this | charge is brought into special rela- tion with the Passover, its absurdity becomes more manifest still, for Pas over bread, as evory one and water, and may not contain zny other ingredient, Evin the -juice "f it. unfit for use. And 'the Passover is more then thousand vears older than ChrisBani ty itself. What did Jews do, one maght, ask, before there were any Christian children to sacrifice ? But several ecirewmstances combined | to give color to the suspicion. There ! was an obvious comparison between matzos and the wafers used at the ! Christian communion.. The latter were believed to contain the blood of Christ, though it was invisible to the human eye. Might not the Passover bread contain a similar ingredient ? So the theological mind would argue. And as the wine used at the Christian | i communion was believed to be endow- | ed with the same mysterious attributes the red wine of "the four cups" would also come to be regarded by Christians as containing actual blood, Again, just as in early times, the performance of Christian mysteries, from which heathens were excluded, ex cited suspicion of foul deeds, so, in dark 'ag everything connected with! the celeb, nature to fill the mind, say, of anig norant servant, with vague terrors of some hatching conspiracy. For weeks before the festival com menced every nook and corner of the Jewish dwelling had been tumed out Utensils had been eleansed or changed, tables had heen scraped. Then the searching for leaven. Amid perfect silence the head aml other members of the family would collet: the crumbs and dust from every room, and burn them on the following day. The domestic ser vice held at night would strike an un- lettered Gentile as strange indeed, The ¢entre" dish containing something mysteriously, concealed in napkins would not unnaturally excite suspic ion, which would be deepenad hy the rad stains that thee red wine 'might leave upon the table cloth after the service was concluded. Anv one of these little incidents could have ved in rude times to excite the belicf that Jews had: been engaged in some diabolical conspiracy. Dut, together, they in the eves of taken al would have amounted an ignorant multitude to positive proof of the commission of a crime. Add to this the. fact that the Jewish Passover is coincident with Easter, the celebration of which in the Roman, and Fastern churches is of a nature to excite the fanaticism of Christ s against a people who are believed to: "have crucified the founder of _ their faith. What erimes would such a people 'not be capal ls of 2 And so the ritual murder fable has lived on through the ages. to be revived in_some form or another, well nigh every Easter, when the Christian is commemorating the passion of his Lord, and the Jew {is celebrating his Passover pith te peculiar ancient rites. 4 Even the indiscriminate hospitality, which is dispensidd on the first | two evenings of Passover, has operated 10 lay Jews open to the charee which their enen have brought against them at this season of the vear. In bygone times it is said to have hap pened that the malefactors have dis guised fhidtfselves as Jews, and re yuited Jewish "hospitality by a ter riple act of treachery. would convey the corpse of a Christian child into their host's dwelling, and secret ly deposit it under the table. The next day, or the same night; the usual cry of child-murder would he raised under suspicious circumstances that sible, Sometimes the fraud would be instantly discovered hy the simple circumstance that the disguised stran ger would be 'discovered reading his prayer hook upside down ! Even then the hapless Jamily were powerless ' > should | know, is manufactured of wlain flour! a ! parties tion of Passover was of gu! against. the = acousation. and though they t save themsclves by imime- diate like Heine's "Rabbi of pate La B trouble would be almost F dertain to fall on the Jewish" com- nunity in consequence. The ceremony of opening the door at one part of the Seder service may; rerhaps, have originated in the precautions that medirval Jews had to take to guard themselves against the klood aecusa- tion. The first charge of ritual mur der was preferred aguinst. the Jews of Norwich, in 1144, and the last was the Konitz case, in 1900; the latter, on the 28th of Marc rh, a week after the termination of s<sover in that Year, MRS. MARY McKITTRICK, An Irish woman living near Union. towp, Pa., cetelrated her. 108th birth day on last St Patrick's Day. Her friends gave her a party and to brove her spryness the old woman danced on that occasion. She has ten children, two of whom live in this country DAYLIGHT RAID ON BANK. Astounding Act of Revolution- aries Who Take £90,000. A bang roboery, dacity, has never been cquealedt by any revolutionary episode, occurred ao the neart of Moscow recently, when thirty Mutual Lredit which tor sheer au {armed un entered th | bans, overpowered the armed guards, and escape with £90000 in nous. | the rovbery-was carcfally planned by desperate revolutionaries who were | ramitiar with the bank and its bus ness, I'he bank is situated behind. the Bourse, and 1s surrounded by other | banking and comercial establish ments. Just at closing time, when Mos [co v's great army of clerks were hur trying homewards, the revolutionaries | loung carvelessty into the bank, in of two and 'three, apparently f1or the purpose of cashing drafts. When about ten mon were inside, they suddenly drew revolvers and cov lered the armed guards, © Such guard haw Leen employed by all the princi pal banks in Russia since the daring irard on a Helsingfors banking estab ment a few wechs=-ago. |. Meanwhile, twenty other revolution- arivs rushed into the building and bar ricaded the woors. The leader aptenta | tivusly placed 4 large infegpal ma [ hine in the midale of the floor. Squads. {of men; who had previously been told off for the purpose, drove the few re- maining clerks into an inner room ransacked the desks and safes. he guards. who had been speedily disarmed offered no resistance, as the Header of the gang threatened to ex plode the machine if the slightest at tempi was made to raise an falarm {Within fifteen minutes the revolu !tivharies were out of the building with £90,000 in notes; which were distributed in small bundles among them. The doors were carcfully locked, land the infernal machine left in the lcentre of the room, When the guard finally psummoned courdge to call for assistance,' the | robbers. Were clear of the district. An Lartillery officer who examined the * 'bomb: said it contained sufficiont ox plosives to wreck the entire building It was fitted with 4 time fuse A heavy cordon of police and troop now surrounds the hank, and admit tance is denied to even directors. Th mayor was only admitted, after great difficulty, There are absolutely. no clues to th identity of the men exeept that they arcerevolutionaries. who" have resorted to this method terrorize the gov ernment, The mound bird, found in Australia, builds the biggest nest in the world It makes mounds somelimes as great tas fifty fet in circamférence, in which five fect deep. telephone area, which it buries its epys The London, covers 600 square miles, is the largest localexchange arca in the world. MARTYRDOM OESCRIBED Kingston Man Tells How He Suf- fered and Now He Was Released. "For years a mar tyr; is how Charles H. Powell, of 105 Raglan strect, Kings ton, begins his story. "A martyr to chron- ic constipation, but now Iam free irom it and all through the use of Dr. Leon hardt"s Anti-Pil." C. H. POWELL Many who are now suffering from this complaint will be glad to learn from" Mr. Powell's story that there is hope for the Tost stubborn case, "* He continues : "1 was induced to try Anti-Pill by reading the testimony of some one wha had been cured of con stipation by it. [. had sufiered for cighteen vears and had taken tons of stull recommended as cures but which made me worse rather than better. Doctors told me there was no cure for me," { Dr. Leonhardt's Anti-Pill is for sale by all druggists or by The, Wilson- File Co., Limited, Niagara Falls; Ont. Mr. Powell will verify every word of these statements, Hus in Kingston ; our announcements, preparation, They Came Hundreds Secured Free Samples and Hundreds Came Too Late The most unique and most successful distiibution of medicine ever attempted We belisve: that an acknowledgement is due to the people of this community that manifested in the free: distribution of FERROL in my store yesterday. ers of FERROL, and we believe a great amount of good will result from our . » { . » 4 . We only wish it was in ur per to distribute a thousand more bottles, that there might be chance fof" disappointment. We thank the people of Kingston for FERROL (Cod Liver Oil, urge you to procure this preparation at once and was an overwhelming. success. 5 the confidence they have shown in our for + astounding response + have distribution. Thousands thronged at the drug store of Geo. W. Mahood, corner Bagot and Princess streets, Friday, when they gave to the public 300 bottles of FERROL. A Card from George W. Mahood TO THE PEOPLE OF KINGSTON : to In all our experience we have never witnessed such ay ad interest in any preparation as pow. possible remarkable Iron and. Phosphorous). Iévou fala to get a bottle of FERROL, we George W. Mahood, "5.52 give it a thorough trial, We are er Bagot and you will be com- Princess Streets You can wear it out butyou can not wear it out ~ Ga pa § 1 /Home Needlework is a magazine lé that everyiady should take. Issue I times a year, 96 pages CTV EY Hlustrated, 50 Cts peryear. Write for sample SLES 553 EE CL Silk Co.Ltd, St. John's, PQ. Aldridge Kendall, Commands Private Yacht Winona. Capt. Aldridge Kendall, Clayton, is of the best known St. Lawrence river captains. He was born in Jefier county in 1551 His experience the St. Lawrence river was such Jdhat when very young his services wore solicited by captains and owner of the best boats. He held the position rst officer and pilot on the steam T. 8S. Faxton at that time one of » largest passenger steamers on the Lawrence river) when he wa twinty-one vears old, Capt Montreal. For several years he 'was master of the Ste Tat company's fleet, He 15 now master of the steamyvacht Winona, the | private yacht of Gen, J, A, Sky-scrapers, fence posts, dams, graph pole piles, chinmeys--4hese put, cal World Magazine duction of Portland cement in the United Last year over 30,000,000 barrels were produced--an increase of nearly 10, 000 per ent. in fifteen vearz. That | marks the growth ef the concrete in dustry, element in concrete Yet, lest inodern constructing engi neers take too much credit, to them selves for the miracles they have ac complished, it may ba well to remind them that the ancient Romans, in 27 Pantheon, sights of the | splendid dome of which is practically solid concrete. shell. Surely no @® building material = could hope for a 'S2 better demonstration of ite dorability ® than that, WELL-KNOWN CAPTAIN. Kendall had experience from Chicago to steamer St, Lawrence, flagship of the Thous sand, Island Johnson, Washington, D.C". Marvels Of Concrete. form, stunted de excesses cra comple if youl a menace We g Diseaces, DEBILITY CURED Excesses and indiscretions are the cause of more sorrow al suffering than all other diseases combihed. Wo sce the victims of vicious habits on every hand; the sallow, pimpled face, dark cigcled Eyes, stooping countenance and timi bearing proclaim to all tho world his folly and tend to blight his existence. Our treatment positively cures all weak men by overcoming and removirg the effects of former indiscretions and It #tops all losses and drains and quickly restores the patient to what nature intended --a healthy and happy mad with physical, mental and nerve pow. For ove r 25 years Dra, K. & K. have treated with the preatest success all diseases of men and women. any secret disease that is a worry and your health consult old established physic iaus who do not have to experiment ou you. itce to cure Nervous Debility, Diecd Stricture, Verlcocele, Kidney and Bladder Diseases. Concultation Free. If unable to call, write for a Question Blank for Home Treatment. Dis. (ENED & KERGAN, 148 Shelby Street, Detroit, Mich. sidewalks, «bridges roofing tiles, tele » railroad ties, residence, are a fow of uses to which concrete has heen writes 1. N. Harper, in Techni-® In 1899 the pro States was 335,000 barrels for cement is the. essential (%, built of concrete the famous which is still one of the | Imperial City, and the i © @ @© ® It will cost you only 6c 'to try them. ceoceeo000EE?® cose @® OOOO OROOAIOIOIOCOOIIOIOOIOIOIO E. B. EDDY'S Rising , =a Star: Parlor. Match In neat attractive boxes containing about s 780 MATCHES Ask Your Grocer For Them A @e@eEeeOe® dsossist © @

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